Having finished the magnificent Lymond series of novel, Dunnett made a brave decision to go back in time rather tha writing a sequel and so here starts her sequence of 8 novels telling of the ancestors of the Crawfords.
Being Dunnett there are no easy parallels, and the forbears of Francis Crawford are a far cry from what we might expect. Set in the C15th in Flanders this tale is set amongst the merchants and traders of Flanders, and the Italian states rather than kings and queens (at least in this first novel). Niccolo, the apprentice Claes, is seemingly young, innocent and accepting but at the novel progresses a very different mind emerges: one more subtle, opaque and dangerous than anyone might have imagined.
This is a brillaint start to Dunnett's second major sequence, less intellctual with none of the fabulous linguistic word-play of the Lymond series, but just as fascinating and perhaps more accessible.
A far cry from the 'historical' novels of the likes of Gregory and Chadwick, this is robust, solid and tangible, with a teasing wit that draws you deeper and deeper into what becomes a very complex story.
The rest of the series in order is Spring of the Ram, Race of Scorpions, Scales of Gold, The Unicorn Hunt, To Lie with Lions, Caprice and Rondo, Gemini.